Totalizator ticket issuing machine



.. im), 11935. G. A. JULlUs TOTALI'ZATOR TICKET ISSUING MACHINE Filed Dec. 7, 1935 www 220 555 656 Patented Dec. l0, 1935 UNITED STATES TOTALIZATOR TICKET I'SSUI'NG MACHINE George Alfred Julius, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia Application December 7,1933, Serial No. 701,382 In Australia December 19, 1932 1 Claim.

It isrof great practical importance that totalizator tickets shall carry certifying-marks to minimize risk of fraud on the part of persons who may alter them and then seek payment of dividends on them. Many instances have been found in the operation of totalizator apparatus in which tickets in the hands of purchasers have been a1- tered by them in order to fraudulently procure the payment of prize moneys.

Known ticket issuing machines (such for instance, as those described in United States Patent No. 1,744,771 dated January 28, 1930 contain certain means for applying check markings to tickets, indicating the number of the competitor, the class of bet (Win, or Place or Show, or Test) the date and the race number. The present invention consists in an auxiliary registration device for such machines and it has been devised tofenable a pay officer to list all winning tickets from a paper record strip. Tickets on which claims are made are checked against this list before payment is made on them, and unclaimed dividends may be readily traced from it. By comparison with the paper strip record any ticket which has suffered alteration after issue can be identified with certainty.

In an issuing machine of the type described in United States Patent No. 1,744,771, a number printing wheel applies markings to the ticket strip which indicate the competitor to which the issued ticket is to apply and another printing Wheel applies markings which indicate the class in which the ticket has been called for (Win, or Place, or Show, or Test) In an issuing machine embodying the present invention, a con secutive numbering device is fitted which appliesa serial number to each ticket that is issued through the machine.

The auxiliary device is a paper record strip printer geared to the issuing machine; it is a1'- ranged for duplicating on a continuous paper strip the markings which are applied to the main ticket strip by the competitor type wheel and by the ticket class type sector, and by the serial numbering device.

The accompanying drawing illustrates only so much of the structural features of the apparatus which is described in my beforementioned patent as is necessary to define the nature of the present invention.

Fig. 1 is a side elevational view; it shows the competitor number printing wheel (58) and the ticket class printing sector I) of the known machine; it shows also the paper record strip and the printer assembly by means of which the check marking is` applied to the paper recordstrip;

Fig. 2 is a fragmentary sectional view through the type Wheel (58) and sector (5|) and certain other parts of the printer assembly bywhich the 5 record strip is printed; and Y Fig. 3 is a Viewof portion of the record strip which is produced inV the machine.

58` is the competitor number markingY wheel, and 5I the class marking sector of the known 10 machine, 'I he sector 5I has four positions respectively for Win, Place, Show, and Test (marked a, b, c, and d), and it is set at thev appropriate one of these positions for marking a ticket about to be issued upon operation of the known dialling device, whichgis set and plunged by the ticket selling clerk when a ticket is called for byvan intendingpurchaser.

As shown in Fig. 2, the spindle-49 which carries the wheel 58 and the sector 5I is extended', and 20 there isfiXed'on theextensionportion ofita competitor number printing wheel I0 which has a type face which corresponds with the type face on the printing wheel 58. The sector 5| is fixed to a sleeve II which is rotatable on the spindle 25 49, and this sleeve II is coupled by a bridging yoke I2 to another sleeve I3 on the same spindle.

A ticket class sector I4 having a type face corresponding with the type face on the ticket class sector 5I is fixed on or is formed integral with 30 the sleeve I3. This sector I4 is positioned sideby-side with the competitor number wheel I0 and also side-by-side with a metal consecutive numbering stamp IB of conventional construction. I'I is an ink ribbon, I8 its feed spool which is fitted 35 to run with a little friction so as to keep the ribbon taut, and I9 'a driver barrel on which it is wound from the spool I8. is the record strip, 2I a feed spool therefor also fitted to run with a little friction to hold the paper strip taut, and 40 22 a take-up spool therefor. The paper feed device by which the spool 22 is driven comprises a pawl 23 driving a detent Wheel 24 which is fixed to the spindle which carries the spool 22 engaged on it. The pawl 23 is pivoted on an oscillating 45 arm 25 to which reciprocating movements are applied by means of a link 26 which articulates it to an arm 21 which is movable on a spindle 28. Another arm 29 which is attached to the arm 21 carries a platen 30 in operative relation to the 50 faces of the type numbering stamp I6, the type wheel I0, and the type sector I4. The ribbon feed is a pawl 32 coacting with a detent wheel 33 which is geared to the take-up spool I9 by the gear train Gli-6I. 'Ihe pawl 32 is carried on an 55 oscillating arm 62 which is articulated by a link 34 to the arm 21. 35 and 36 are guide bars over which the ink ribbon is drawn and stretched intermediate the spools I8 and I9. The record strip 20 runs over a guide bar 31 and thence over the spindle 28 which forms a guide for it, to the spool 22. E4 and 65 are check pawls for preventing reverse movement of the spools. The ribbon I1 runs between the record strip 20 and the type Wheel I0, the type sector I4 and the numbering stamp I6; this stamp is advanced one digit for each operative movement of the platen 30, the stamp movement being effected by a link or tappet actuated from any appropriate moving part in the assembly. When the platen 30 is rocked towards the wheel I and sector I4 the record strip is printed through the ink ribbon with the characters on the type faces which are for the time being in register position.

Each ticket that is issued from the machine is numbered in correspondence with the Yconsecutive number printed on the paper record strip, Fig. 3, side-by-side with the competitor number and class number which are marked on the strip by the type faces on the wheel I0 and the sector I4, so that each ticket issued can be afterwards identified with the corresponding entry on the record strip 2U. The strip 2U shows (as illustrated in Fig. 3) the following record: Ticket No. 65,231 Was a Win ticket issued on competitor No. 2; ticket No. 65,232 was a Place ticket issued on competitor No. 8; ticket No. 65,233 was a Show ticket issued on competitor No. 7; and ticket No. 65,234 was a Test (cancelled) ticket from No. 3 issuing machine. The record strip is printed line by line automatically as the tickets are printed by the Wheels 58 and 5I. The printed tickets are severed by a guillotine and issued one by one out of the machine. The record strip is wound upon the spool 22 and from the record printed thereon a list can be compiled showing the check particulars required for verifying the authenticity of every ticket issued out of the machine to a purchaser, and unless every one of the markings on a fraudulently altered ticket corresponded with the markings on the strip record the fraudulently altered ticket would be instantly detected by the paying clerk.

The record strip spools are mounted for rapid removal and replacement, so that at the end of a race, the spool carrying the printed length of 10 the record strip can be readily removed and replaced by an empty spool in readiness for the next race.

Operative movement is applied to the arms 21 and 29 through an arm 68 which connects 15 them through a link 69 to the oscillator mechanism 53 of the issuing machine.

What I claim as my invention and desire to secure by Letters Patent is:-

In a totalizator printing and issuing machine, a single shaft, a type faced main ticket printing wheel element and a ticket printing sector element mounted on said shaft, one of said elements being fixed to said shaft and the other rotatable relatively thereto, an auxiliary printing 25 device for producing a consecutive identication record of all tickets printed by said elements, said device including an auxiliary wheel element and an auxiliary sector element both mounted on said shaft and having type faces corresponding respectively with the type face ticket printing wheel and sector elements, one of the auxiliary elements being rigidly connected with the shaft, and means coupling the other auxiliary element with the rotatable main element, record strip feeding means, ink ribbon feeding means, a platen coacting with said auxiliary elements, and an actuating member common to the record strip and ink ribbon feeding means and said platen.

GEORGE ALFRED JULIUS. 

